mythology
| audio
| news/performance | discog
| press | buy
| links | contact
Love
is the Best Con in Town
New York Night Train Recordings 2006
With
my band at the time, pretty much one-hundred-percent of the
Gnomes, otherwise occupied on the road backing Adam Green, I
decided to track some tunes that autumn with Mark Ephraim. He
had a studio in the same building that the Gnomes rehearsed
in. Mark, a Detroit native, co-produced, engineered and played
guitar. "Count Me In!" and "Cold as the Stars"
date from this session. There were some other tunes including
"Shadowlandz" but upon further consideration I felt
that they were a bit too lugubrious, and slow moving, even for
me.
I
didn’t have enough money to go back and track new songs
with Mark so I decided I would buy a tube pre-amp and a good
mic and use them in conjunction with my superannuated Oswald
15. This is one of the luxuries you have when you have no label,
no band, no manager, no lawyer, no budget, no fans, and no time
limit. You can pull back and return to the drawing board; you
can call for an aesthetic do-over.
I
continued a pattern where I’ve based the sound of one
album on my favorite song from the album previous to it. So
Bad Timing was more or less based on “Out on
Bail” from Maledictions - while the songs on
Love is the Best Con are more or less cut from the
same musical cloth as “Disaster Film” from Bad Timing.
I had become obsessed with the sound of the piano and I wanted
to orient the sound of whatever new music I made around it.
It's a mysterious instrument to me. I can barely play, but,
whenever I sit down in front of it, I’m amazed by all
the rhythms and colors that come flying out. Besides, my guitar
was such a piece of crap - I got tired of trying to tune it
every five minutes.
I
don’t personally associate a lot of the pop music that’s
been made on the piano (that I listen to anyways) with the debauched,
depraved and dissipated style of rock and roll that I had been
exploring up until recently. I mean, there probably is a Johnny
Thunders of the piano but I just don’t hear him. Although
the Beach Boys may have been one of the most fucked up bands
of all time, the piano driven songs on Sunflower, Holland,
Carl and the Passions radiate a good natured soulfulness
that I wasn’t finding in the Stooges, the Heartbreakers,
etc.
In
addition to the Beach Boys’ albums, I was also inspired
by Worker’s Playtime by B.B. Blunder, the song
"O Caroline" by Matching Mole… and when I was
recording the album I would A/B it to the Ballad of Todd Rundgren
(a really dry sounding kind of lo-fi album from 1971). However,
my long-standing obsession with the NY Dolls, Chuck Berry, The
Faces and the Rolling Stones remains evident throughout.
So
I began making music at home. I knew the songs would not be
paeans to my own untimely death. That was pretty much the only
criterion I had for the album, no drug songs…
After
I’d completed writing 3 or 4 songs I’d usually drag
my gear over to the rehearsal space of the drummer who had the
time and inclination to play on my songs. More often than not
it would be Parker Kindred (who would also stop by my house
and add his distinctive voice to many of the songs) and we’d
run through a track or two a few times until we were happy with
the performance. Then I’d pack up and go home...
Next,
I would record the upright piano (that’s featured on every
song) in room 804b at the Rhet Lorens Academy of Musical Theatre
in mid-town. It’s a kind of rehearsal space for would-be
Broadway actors, singers, belly dancers etc. A totally non-rock’n’roll
environment. And very cheap rental rates…
"His Baleful Eye” was one of the first songs undertaken.
Starting out as a recollection of a dream that I had, another
dead rock star dream, it was initially about David Bowie dead
in his coffin, but not truly dead. He was actually angry and
he stared at me. His one dilated eye radiated hostility. But
the song's subject matter changed to what was on my mind at
that time - the recent departure of my ex-girlfriend. Dave Sherman
made up the piano riff in the verse that the song is built around.
"What
do you sing about when you don’t want to sing about love?
let's see my life is filled with interesting stuff
David Bowie died in my dream last night
he lay in his coffin with his baleful eye
then he turned into you..."
Rich
Meyer added eerie, sweeping harmonies to the chorus. He contributed
vast amounts of sonic coloring to Love is… If
more people knew about his preternatural harmonic talents I
think he would become a highly sought after studio guy. He can
knock out a three-part harmony in minutes and his pitch is nearly
inhuman in its perfection. Rich is currently the bass player
in J Russo’s band Hopewell. As for J., we’ve been
tight since ’95 when he played bass in Mercury Rev. I
think we met when St. Johnny played at the Rhinecliff Hotel
on a double bill with Agitpop.
Although
this is the first Grand Mal album not produced by Dave Fridmann
he was nice enough to master it.
And,
for all of you completists, here’s the list of all of
the talented folks who dropped by my house to lay down tracks
for the record…
reno
bo--bass guitar, lead and rhythm guitar (the Fame)
chris isom--lead guitar, phantom guitar ( Kapow!)
phil williams---drums (Hopewell and the Silent League)
steve mertens—bass (the Adam Green band)
joan wasser---viola/violin (Joanas Policewoman)
nate brown---wurlitzer (the Adam Green band)
mark ephraim---lead guitar, engineer, co-production (the Shorebirds)
j.russo--lead guitar (Hopewell)
justin russo—keyboards (the Silent League)
rich meyer--bass guitar, back-up vocals (Hopewell)
parker kindred---drums, percussion and back-up vocals (the Adam
Green band, Antony & the Jonsons)
jon natchez--baritone, tenor sax, flute, lap steel the Silent
League)
mike fadem--drums and percussion (the Silent League, the Jealous
Girlfriends)
kevin thaxton—bass (the Silent League, the Winter Pageant)
dave sherman---piano and organ (GoodbyeGirl Friday)
michael robertson--lead guitar (Mason Dixon)
lisa haney- cello
ryan smith—piano (a Million Billion)
ari surdoval--lead guitar, acoustic guitar
james beaudreau--lead and rhythm guitar
amy miles--back-up vocals
charles hughes—organ
Track
Listing:
01.
From Hartford to Times Square.
02. Cold
As the Stars MP3
03. Count
Me In! MP3
04. Not a Penny to My Name
05. People Change (Maybe They Don't)
06. His Baleful Eye
07. The
Best Con In Town MP3
08. Living on Charity
09. C’mon
10. World I Thought You Turned Yer Back
11. Here's to Our Estrangement
12. Down At The Country Club
Read
press for Love Is the Best Con In Town
Read
more about this period in Grand Mal Mythology, Part 5 (2003
- 2006)
Return to Grand Mal
Discography Home